What Does Retirement Mean for Prince Philip?
While just hours after the official announcement was made he also joked about his advanced years at palace reception. Philip retired when Elizabeth became a queen in 1952, having previously reached the rank of vice-chief.

Kim Jong-un is smart cookie: US President Donald Trump
That means, McMaster said, working to enforce current United Nations sanctions and perhaps ratcheting them up. "I don't know. Trump also praised the despotic leader during the interview , saying, "At a very young age, he was able to assume power.

SP lost elections due to its own follies: Mulayam
Earlier in April, Shivpal had urged former state chief minister Akhilesh Yadav to embrace Mulayam as the party head again. Party sources said that a Samajwadi Party split is imminent and there is a waiting game on as to who blinks first.

Oil prices near $50 a barrel after U.S
But after getting an initial lift from the deal, prices slipped into a downward spiral in mid-April that intensified this week. PetroChina, China's biggest oil producer, lost 3.2 percent and Sinopec, the country's largest refiner, fell 2.8 percent.

Co-favorite Always Dreaming wins Kentucky Derby
Wayne Lukas for the most in Derby history. "We wanted to get in a position we like to have, in a comfortable position". Irish War Cry, who like Always Dreaming was sent off at odds of 9-2, couldn't handle the sloppy going and ended 10th.

ICICI Bank posts 189 per cent jump in PAT
ICICI Bank shares had closed 1.16 percent down at Rs 272.75 at the BSE on Wednesday, prior to the announcement of earnings data. Those assets which were on the fringe (for ICICI Bank ), will become better assets in the coming fiscal", Kant said.

US trade deficit narrows in March
Trade figures also carry political implications as President Donald Trump seeks to revamp USA trade deals with other countries. As a result, Canada's trade surplus with the United States slipped to $3.97-billion from $4.51-billion in February.

US man arrested over series of fatal Arizona shootings

Police in Arizona have arrested a 23-year-old man accused of spreading terror around the state capital Phoenix with a series of random shootings that left nine people dead.

After an investigation, however, police said they linked Saucedo, dubbed the "serial street shooter", to the random murders of eight others between August 2015 and July 2016.

The gunman's targets included men, women and children, many of them ambushed near their homes in a working-class neighborhood from August 2015 to July 2016.

The relatives of two victims in a serial shooting case that Phoenix police say they've solved say they're relieved but hurting emotionally.

Authorities on Monday said Aaron Saucedo faces homicide charges in connection with a case police have said was the work of a serial killer.

"Now my heart goes out to those families, and I hope they can get justice, too", said Lora Romero.

The case finally broke when Saucedo was arrested last month in connection with the August 2015 fatal shooting of 61-year-old Raul Romero, who had a relationship with Saucedo's mother. Phoenix police say that they have " a wide host of evidence", that includes ballistics, witnesses and forensic evidence connecting Saucedo to the deaths of at least nine.

Investigators initially believed a serial shooter was responsible for seven deaths previous year, but in recent weeks they determined two other victims were also shot by the same gunman, who they believe to be Saucedo, including the victim killed in August 2015.

Mr Castro-Garcia, 19, was fatally shot on June 10 2016. On Monday, he was booked on 26 additional felony counts, including in another slaying that hadn't previously been tied to the serial shooter.

'Today is a good day in the city of Phoenix.

Saucedo told authorities he had changed his appearance and stopped driving his BMW after the police released descriptions of him and the vehicle last summer, Howard said.

Authorities say Saucedo didn't know the other victims.

Prosecutors said it hasn't been decided how many cases they will take to trial, suggesting the evidence in some is stronger than in others.

"[Police] said they couldn't give me a lot of details, as it's still an active case", Ellis said.